the Beach Boys meet Frankenstein
I think Hank did say this, but only about one song Lord How It's Hurting, which provides a joke ending. Same idea as Her Majesty on the Beatles' "Abbey Road" LP.
the Beach Boys meet Frankenstein
alewis41 wrote:Fenderman wrote:The two albums by M, W & F are superb but the 1973 M&F album seems a little strange, the whole album has an air of gloom around it. Hank later said it was the worst album he ever made, he said it was like the Beach Boys meet Frankenstein!
I remember the "Beach Boys meet Frankenstein" quote and the comment about them losing direction, but I have never heard the "worst album he ever made" quote. The only album I knew Hank really hated was the Shads "Live in Japan" album.
Do you have a source for the M&F worst album quote?
Thanks,
Andrew
P.S. For what it's worth it's my favourite Hank album!
Fenderman wrote:The two albums by M, W & F are superb but the 1973 M&F album seems a little strange, the whole album has an air of gloom around it. Hank later said it was the worst album he ever made, he said it was like the Beach Boys meet Frankenstein!
Monty wrote:The Full Concert CD version (if it was the full set) which added extra tracks to the original vinyl 'Live in Paris' LP was really great - true 'Dance On' sounded a bit strange with John Farrar playing a 'counter melody' behind Hank's guitar which was not to all Shads fans taste, but their harmony lead guitarwork (even on 'Apache') was impressive - and had echoes of a few such tracks Hank & Bruce played in harmony on the very first Shads album in 1961 which impressed Cliff (per his linear notes)
they took 'Flingel Bunt' in a more adventurous direction, and the electrified 'Guitar Tango' was an interesting contrast too, while 'Sleepwalk' on harmony lead guitars sounded great - notable how a number of tracks from the very first Shads album - including 'Shadoogie' & the perennial 'Nivram' - were featured, plus a number of early Jet Harris & Tony Meehan era singles too
M W & F were represented by a few fine vocal tracks (with the Rock & Roll vocal medley too) plus 'Turn Around And Touch Me' (then the latest EMI single) was included in a nice live version - 'Honorable Puff Puff' clearly went down a storm with the Paris audience !
Tony Clarke (The Moody Blues & Sky producer) originally mixed the set.
The original EMI 'Live in Paris' 1975 LP was of course later twinned with "Live in Japan' 1969 in a fine budget priced MFP double set (an underrated release with the non UK Japan set finally getting a UK release)
I particularly rate that 'Full Concert Version' CD of the 'Live in Paris' album (a set that always brings home to me how much they lost, both instrumentally and vocally, when John Farrar later departed)
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